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How to Plant Fingerling Potatoes

By Lisa Jensen; Updated September 21, 2017

Fingerling is a specialty variety of potato (Solanum spp.) with long, narrow tubers that often can be broken easily into smaller sections. Most cultivars of the late-season plant require 90 to 100 days of frost-free weather to mature. Fingerling tubers -- which are edible and grow underground -- are 1½ to 2 inches wide and usually 2 to 4 inches long. Sometimes the tubers have knobby joints. Location and timing are two important factors when planting fingerling potatoes, which usually are grown as annuals in the United States.

Location and Soil

Choose a sunny location where you did not grow potatoes, tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum), peppers (Capsicum annuum), eggplant (Solanum melongena.) or other nightshade family plants during the previous two years. Potatoes thrive in well-drained sandy, loamy soil with a pH of 4.8 to 5.5. If your garden has clay soil, then mix in a 3- to 4-inch-thick layer of composted manure, leaves or compost a few weeks before planting.

Timing of Planting

Plant fingerling seed potatoes two to four weeks before your area's average annual last frost date. Ensure the ground temperature has warmed to at least 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Late frosts may kill new foliage, but the plants will survive and sprout new growth.

Preparation and Planting

Fingerling seed potatoes are prepared and planted in the same way as the seed potatoes of other varieties, though each fingerling seed potato is smaller. Use certified, disease-free fingerling seed potatoes to avoid scab, blight and other diseases to which the plants are susceptible.

Cut fingerling seed potatoes into 1-ounce pieces with at least two or three eyes -- small, dark bumps from which stems will grow -- per piece. Breaking fingerling pieces into smaller pieces at their joints is simple.

Plant the pieces 4 to 6 inches deep in soil, with each piece's cut side facing downward and its eyes facing upward. Space the pieces 18 inches apart in rows that are 3 feet apart. Fingerlings sprawl more than traditional potato plants, and so they need more room to grow. Water the site well to settle the soil around the planted pieces. Then ensure the soil gets 1 inch of water per week, supplementing rainfall as needed; keep the soil evenly moist but not soggy.

Various Tuber Colors and Textures

Like other potato tubers, fingerling tubers range in color from the tan "Austrian Crescent" to the pink "Rose Finn Apple" and cranberry "French Fingerling," all of which have yellow flesh. The tubers of "Purple Peruvian," however, are purple through and through, and the skin and flesh of "Red Thumb" are red.

Most fingerling varieties have waxy flesh, though the flesh of "Purple Peruvian," "Red Thumb," "Ozette" and "Butterfinger" has a drier texture.

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About the Author

Lisa Jensen grows organic food and lives in an adobe house that she built. She teaches aikido, is an experienced back-country skier and backpacker and is active in her community. A graduate of the University of Calgary, Jensen writes about gardening, home projects, social sciences and sports and recreation.